Nevelin W. Wilson, Libelant-Appellant v. United States

229 F.2d 277, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1956
Docket23543_1
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 229 F.2d 277 (Nevelin W. Wilson, Libelant-Appellant v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nevelin W. Wilson, Libelant-Appellant v. United States, 229 F.2d 277, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4786 (2d Cir. 1956).

Opinion

FRANK, Circuit Judge.

The trial judge wrote no opinion but made and filed findings of fact and legal conclusions as follows: 1

“This cause having been tried by the court the following are made Findings of Fact.
“1. Libelant, 47 years of age, was employed on January 17, 1952, as first assistant engineer aboard the S.S. Ethan A. Hitchcock.
“2. The S.S. Ethan A. Hitchcock at all times hereinafter mentioned was a Liberty ship owned and operated by the United States of America.
“3. On January 17, 1952, while at sea, the libelant agreed at the request of the master of the S.S. Ethan A. Hitchcock to repair a range or foremast light.
“4. In an attempt to ascend the ladder attached to the foremast from the deck of the foremast table, he fell to the main deck and severely injured the second, third and fourth transverse process of the lumbar vertebra, together with the sacrum.
“5. Libelant slipped and fell and sustained the injuries described as a result of ‘a slight lurch’ of the vessel ‘causing [him] to loose [sic] [his] grip on the mast ladder.’
“6. There was no grease on the foremast table at the time of the accident to the libelant.
“7. There was sufficient space between the ladder attached to the foremast and the edge of the foremast table for the libelant to ascend the ladder safely, and the ship was in all other respects seaworthy.
“8. As a result of his injuries, libel-ant was transferred on January 19,1952, to a Coast Guard launch at Baltimore and admitted to the Public Health Service Hospital in that city where he was under treatment for his injuries until February 6, 1952.
“9. Thereafter libelant was an outpatient of the hospital until March 3, *279 1952, on which date he obtained employment as a night engineer on various vessels until July 21, 1952, a period of 70 working days for which he received approximately $1200.
“10. On July 21, 1952, libelant returned to sea as a second engineer and has been employed in his calling ever since.
“The following are made Conclusions of Law.
“1. The court has jurisdiction of the cause and venue has been waived by the respondent.
“2. The libel should be dismissed for failure of the libelant to sustain the burden of proof with respect to either negligence on the part of the respondent or unseaworthiness in any respect of the S. S. Ethan A. Hitchcock.
“3. Libelant was injured in the service of the S.S. Ethan A. Hitchcock but he is not entitled to maintenance and cure since March 3, 1952, was a fair and reasonable time after the voyage to effect improvement in his condition and since prior to that time he had been paid an agreed sum for maintenance and cure.”

1. As to alleged negligence and unsearworthiness

The judge’s findings are not “clearly erroneous,” and they support his legal conclusions. Shortly after the accident, Wilson signed a statement concerning it, reading as follows: “I was going to fix a light on the foremast and when I started from the masthouse up the mastladder, the ship gave a lurch causing me to loose my grip and I fell from the masthouse [to] the deck and striking my back and head during the fall.” This statement was presumably made while Wilson was experiencing great pain and maybe while under shock; his condition might therefore explain his failure to mention the presence of grease, had he assigned no other cause of the accident. But he did then give as the sole reason the ship’s lurch, and it is unlikely that he would not have ascribed his fall to the presence of grease if in fact he had slipped on it. At the trial, he testified that he thus slipped; and this, together with the testimony of other witnesses, would have justified an inference that the accident was so caused. But the trial judge, who saw and heard the witnesses, had discretion to disbelieve all the testimony to that effect. We cannot revise his evaluation of the witnesses’ credibility, for the “demeanor evidence” has escaped our scrutiny.

We think the record evidence supports the judge’s finding that “there was sufficient space between the ladder attached to the foremast and the edge of the foremast table for the libelant to ascend the ladder safely.” Libelant argues that the fall to the main deck resulted from the failure to rig the mast-table railing with a wire or rope run through the railing stanchions around the perimeter of the mast-table. But, so far as appears, this rigging may have been intended to be used only to protect those working on the mast-table. More important, it is so purely conjectural whether such a rigging would have prevented the fall that we cannot say the judge erred in not indulging in such a conjecture.

2. The alleged inadequacy of the allowance for maintenance and cure

Libelant was injured on January 17, 1952. He entered the Public Health Service Hospital in Baltimore on January 19 and remained there until February 6, 1952, when he was discharged to an out-patient status. His hospital records show that “no work indefinitely” was then recommended. He testified that he was told to report to the New Orleans or the Baltimore Hospital in five or six weeks for a discharge; that he reported to the Baltimore Hospital on March 3; and that the doctor consented to give him a discharge as an out-patient and said “try yourself out on light work.” Thereafter, libelant took part-time work as a night relief engineer on ships in port. He testified that he then still had “slight pains” but that the job of relief engineer did not require “manu *280 al or physical labor.” He did such work for approximately 70 days, from March 3 until he secured full time employment at sea at his regular job of second assistant engineer; on July 21, 1955. 2

The trial judge held libelant not entitled to maintenance and cure after March 3, 1952, since that date “was a fair and reasonable time after the voyage to effect improvement in his condition.” Libelant had been paid an agreed sum for maintenance and cure up to March 3, and the judge therefore denied libellant’s claim for maintenance and cure during any subsequent period.

Libelant contends he was entitled to maintenance and cure for the days, between March 3 and July 17,1952, when he was out of work. He does not ask for maintenance and cure for the days he worked; to this he clearly is not entitled, since maintenance and cure is intended to assist seamen who are incapacitated in the course of their employment and cannot earn enough to provide themselves with proper medical care and lodging and sustenance. 3

A seaman’s right to maintenance and cure continues for a reasonable time' after the voyage has ended; this period consists of the time necessary to effect a maximum cure, i.

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Bluebook (online)
229 F.2d 277, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevelin-w-wilson-libelant-appellant-v-united-states-ca2-1956.